Carlsborg, just west of Sequim, was founded in 1915 by C.J. Erickson and named after his hometown, Karlsborg, Sweden. Karlsborg sits in south central Sweden in Västra Götaland County along the western shore of Vättern, the country’s second largest lake. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

In Carlsborg, just west of Sequim, there are differing opinions among the burgeoning business community and residents about how to say its name.

Gil Simon, owner of Sequim Village Glass, said he’s heard a mixture of “-berg” and “-borg.”

“I used to correct people when they mispronounced Sequim,” he said. “I stopped doing it awhile back, and I’ve never corrected people over Carlsborg.”

Simon said he’s always said “-borg.”

“That’s the correct name, I think,” he said. “Most people I speak to say ‘-borg.’ It’s what you’re used to hearing.”

About 20 years ago, Jac Osborn, owner of By Design Group in Carlsborg, said he was corrected by a local when he moved to the area.

“I was told it was ‘Carlsberg,’” he said. “If it is ‘-borg,’ it doesn’t bother me one way or the other. If one of the founding fathers told me it was a specific way, then I’d follow that.”

Yet Osborn and dozens of other locals interviewed split on whether or not it’s pronounced “Carlsborg” or “Carlsberg.”

Jenny Nichols, a clerk in the Carlsborg Post Office, said she’s called it “Carlsberg” since she can remember.

“I didn’t realize it was spelled differently until I was older,” she said.

Christina Turner rings up a customer inside the Carlsborg Station that serves as a gas station, convenience store and Blimpie’s sandwich shop. She and other employees say they’ve only heard Carlsborg pronounced as “Carlsberg.” Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

“I say ‘-borg’ because that’s how it’s spelled,” she said. “I have heard it both ways. For Carlsborg Road, (people) say ‘-berg.’ I think we should pronounce it how it’s intended.”

How to say “Carlsborg” is something many people like Jim Schumacher, owner of Carlsborg Station, said they’ve never thought about it or ever heard being contested.

He feels it’s pronounced “Carlsberg.”

“That’s how everyone has always said it to us,” Schumacher said. “I’ve never heard anyone say ‘-borg.’”

The gas station features a mural by late artist Tim Quinn of the No. 9 train that ran through the area. Schumacher said Quinn did a lot of research for the piece.

Larry Culp, co-owner of Old Mill Cafe and a Carlsborg resident since 1957, owns the original sign off the Carlsborg Mill that operated from 1915-1967 and always says “-borg.”

“It is ‘-borg,’ definitely with an ‘o’,” Culp said.

“A lot of people say ‘-berg.’ I think it’s ‘-borg.’”

Larry Culp, co-owner of Old Mill Cafe and a Carlsborg resident since 1957, sits in his restaurant by the Carlsborg Mill’s original sign that sits over the bar. As far as how to say Carlsborg, Culp says ‘-Borg.’ “A lot of people say ‘-Berg.’ I think it’s ‘-Borg,’” he said. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

A brief history of Carlsborg

Carlsborg’s roots begin with Sweden’s C.J. Erickson.

Oscar Fogde wrote in the Clallam County Historical Society’s “Jimmy Come Lately: the History of Clallam County” in 1971 that Erickson, a millionaire through his construction efforts, moved to Seattle and became interested in the Olympic Peninsula around 1914 and began investing and building railways stretching from Port Angeles to Port Townsend.

He later sold his stretches of railway and acquired large timber holdings south of Sequim in the Lost Mountain district, and in Indian Valley between Lake Aldwell and Lake Sutherland, Fogde wrote.

The key part of this brief history lesson is that Erickson opted to build a sawmill and shingle mill just west of Sequim to process his timber. He named the town after his hometown, Karlsborg, Sweden.

Karlsborg sits in south central Sweden in Västra Götaland County along the western shore of Vättern, the country’s second largest lake.

Erickson broke ground in August 1915, Fogde wrote, and the sawmill was the first all-electric sawmill in the Northwest, and it generated its own electricity.

The mill was eventually designed to cut 100,000 feet of lumber per day that was mostly sent to the Midwest.

Washington’s Carlsborg featured a 13-mile logging railway just south of town up to the Lost Mountain district, and a theater, built in the 1920s, that showed movies on Saturday and Sunday evenings, Fogde wrote.

Twenty-one years after establishing Carlsborg, Erickson sold his interests in 1936 to a Seattle firm with the intent of scrapping the mill but it was overhauled and reopened on Jan. 1, 1937 and operated as the Dungeness Timber Company under Grays Harbor lumbermen.

Owners of the Standard Lumber Company in Seattle owned and operated the Timber Company in the late 1940s and early 1950s before The Orban Lumber Company of Pasadena, Calif., bought the property in 1960 and operated it until the fall of 1967.

Fogde wrote that the mill shuttered after interest rates grew so high that prospective home-builders opted not to borrow money for new construction.

The mill was torn down but Carlsborg continued.

Today, Clallam County officials say Carlsborg spans just north of Idea Place to south in the Parkwood housing development, and west to portions of Atterberry Road and Spath Road, and east along Mill Road and portions of Taylor Cut-off and Gilbert Roads.

Above: Gil Simon, owner of Sequim Village Glass inside the old Carlsborg Store, said he says Carlsborg with a “-Borg.” “That’s the correct name, I think,” he said. “Most people I speak to say ‘-Borg.’ It’s what you’re used to hearing.” Below: Christina Turner rings up a customer inside the Carlsborg Station that serves as a gas station, convenience store and Blimpie’s sandwich shop. She and other employees say they’ve only heard Carlsborg pronounced as “Carlsberg.”

“If it is ‘-borg,’ then logic and reason will conquer all,” he said. “I like to go by the book. I’ve lived here 34 years now, and I better do it by the book.”

Sunny Farms grocery clerk Shawn Anders says “Carlsberg” when pronouncing the area he’s lived in his whole life. “If it is ‘Borg,’ then logic and reason will conquer all,” he said. “I like to go by the book. I’ve lived here 34 years now, and I better do it by the book.” Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

What they say?

Carlsborg business and community members share their thoughts on how to say “Carlsborg” or “Carlsberg.”

● Lisa Deese, owner of The Old Post Office

“I always said ‘-berg’ but then I started working here and I started saying ‘-borg,’” she said.

● Dave Hodkinson, employee at Sunny Farms

“I say ‘-borg.’ I pronounce it for orders over the phone so they don’t get it wrong,” he said.